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FY 2011
2012 State Higher Education Executive Officers State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO) is a nonprofit, nationwide association of the chief executive officers serving statewide coordinating and governing boards for postsecondary education. The mission of SHEEO is to assist its members and the states in developing and sustaining excellent systems of higher education. SHEEO pursues its mission by: organizing regular professional development meetings for its members and their senior staff; maintaining regular systems of communication among the professional staffs of member agencies; serving as a liaison between the states and the federal government; studying higher education policy issues and state activities and publishing reports to inform the field; and implementing projects to enhance the capacity of the states and SHEEO agencies to improve higher education. An electronic version of this report, State Higher Education Finance FY 2011, and numerous supplementary tables containing extensive state-level data are available at www.sheeo.org. These may be freely used with appropriate attribution and citation. In addition, core data and derived variables used in the SHEF study for fiscal years 1992 through 2011 are available on the SHEEO website and also through the National Center for Higher Education Management Systems (NCHEMS)-sponsored Information Center for State Higher Education Policymaking and Analysis website at www.higheredinfo.org.
SHEEO gratefully acknowledges the assistance of The College Board in financing the costs of publication.
Acknowledgements
We are pleased to present the ninth annual SHEEO State Higher Education Finance (SHEF) study of state support for higher education. SHEF builds on and augments the surveys of various federal agencies. The higher education finance surveys and reports produced by the National Center for Education Statistics in the U.S. Department of Education provide extensive institution level data, which can be aggregated to the sector, state, and national levels. The Bureau of Economic Analysis, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the U.S. Census Bureau are additional data sources on other aspects of higher education financing and operations. Together these federal sources provide the foundation and reference points for our collective understanding of how we finance higher education and for what purposes. Over the years, a community of policy analysts has utilized federal surveys, collected supplemental data, and performed a wide range of analytical studies to inform state-level policy and decisions. This report builds directly on a twenty-five year effort by Kent Halstead, an analyst and scholar of state policy for higher education, who conceptualized and implemented a report on state finance for higher education and created a file of state financial data that extends from the early 1970s to the late 1990s. Halsteads data were frequently used in the states as a resource to guide policy decisions. While he never described it as such, his survey became widely known as the Halstead Finance Survey. SHEF also draws on the surveys and analytical tools provided by the Grapevine survey, established in 1962 by M.M. Chambers and maintained by his successors, Edward Hines and, currently, James Palmer, at Illinois State University. In the summer of 2010, SHEEO and Illinois State University aligned the Grapevine and SHEF data collections into one. For the past two years, the combined State Support for Higher Education Database (SSDB) data collection has simplified and aligned data collection procedures, reduced the burden placed on state offices, and created a more timely and comprehensive picture of state fiscal support for higher education. We are grateful for the leadership of James Palmer in making this effort possible. SHEEO is deeply indebted to the staff of state higher education agencies who provide the state-level data essential for the preparation of this report. Their names and organizations are listed in Appendix C. We also appreciate the input and suggestions from many state higher education finance officers (SHEFOs) and others who have contributed much to the development of this report. Andrew Carlson, a former data provider from Colorado, took charge of the State Higher Education Finance Study this year, building on the foundation laid since 2003 by a talented group of other SHEEO staff , most recently Allison Bell. Katie Zaback and Chris Ott also made important contributions to this years study, and Hans LOrange and Gloria Auer gave the narrative their expert editorial touches. I am grateful for their dedicated professional work. Finally, we gratefully acknowledge the assistance of The College Board in financing the costs of publishing and distributing the FY 2011 report. Paul E. Lingenfelter President State Higher Education Executive Officers
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements..................................................................................................................... i Table of Contents ...................................................................................................................... 1 List of Tables ............................................................................................................................. 2 List of Figures ............................................................................................................................ 3 Introduction.............................................................................................................................. 5 Overview and Highlights ............................................................................................................. 7 Measures, Methods, and Analytical Tools.....................................................................................13 Revenue Sources and Uses .........................................................................................................17 National Trends in Enrollment and Revenue .................................................................................19 Interstate ComparisonsMaking Sense of Many Variables .............................................................25 State Wealth, Taxes, and Allocations for Higher Education..............................................................43 Conclusion ...............................................................................................................................48 Technical Paper A .....................................................................................................................49 Technical Paper B .....................................................................................................................53 Technical Paper C .....................................................................................................................57 APPENDIX AGrapevine Media Tables ........................................................................................61 APPENDIX BGlossary of Terms .................................................................................................63 APPENDIX CState Data Providers..............................................................................................67 APPENDIX DSSDB Collection Instructions...................................................................................75
List of Tables
Table 1: Major Sources and Uses of State and Local Government Support ................................18 Table 2: Higher Education Finance Indicators (Current Dollars in Millions) ................................22 Table 3: Higher Education Finance Indicators (Constant 2011 Dollars in Millions) .....................23 Table 4: Public Higher Education Full-Time-Equivalent (FTE) Enrollment ..................................27 Table 5: Educational Appropriations per FTE (Constant 2011 Dollars) .......................................29 Table 6: Public Higher Education Net Tuition Revenue per FTE (Constant 2011 Dollars) ............31 Table 7: Total Educational Revenue per FTE (Constant 2011 Dollars) ........................................33 Table 8: State Wealth, Tax Revenue, Effective Tax Rates, and Higher Education Allocation U.S., 1999-2009 (Current Dollars) ...............................................................................44 Table 9: Tax Revenues, Taxable Resources, and Effective Tax Rates, by State, Fiscal 2009 .........46 Table 10: Perspectives on State and Local Government Higher Education Funding Effort by State....................................................................47 Technical Paper Table 1: CPI-U, HEPI, and HECA Indexed to Fiscal Year 2011 ............................51 Technical Paper Table 2: Enrollment Mix Index and Cost of Living Adjustments by State ...........55 Technical Paper Table 3: Impact of Enrollment Mix Index and Cost of Living Adjustments by State ...........................................................................56
List of Figures
Figure 1: State, Local, and Net Tuition Revenue Supporting General Operating Expenses of Higher Education, U.S., Fiscal Year 2010, Current Dollars.............................................. 8 Figure 2: State, Local, and Net Tuition Revenue Supporting General Operating Expenses of Higher Education, U.S., Fiscal Year 2011, Current Dollars.............................................. 9 Figure 3: Public FTE Enrollment and Educational Appropriations per FTE U.S., Fiscal 1986-2011 .............................................................................................. 20 Figure 4: Net Tuition as a Percent of Public Higher Education Total Educational Revenue U.S., Fiscal 1986-2011 ............................................................................................... 24 Figure 5: Full-Time-Equivalent (FTE) Enrollment in Public Higher Education Percent Change by State, Fiscal 2006-2011 ................................................................ 26 Figure 6: Educational Appropriations per FTE Percent Change by State, Fiscal 2006-2011 ........ 28 Figure 7: Net Tuition as a Percent of Public Higher Education Total Educational Revenue by State, Fiscal 2011 ...................................................................................................... 30 Figure 8: Total Educational Revenue per FTE Percent Change by State, Fiscal 2006-2011 ......... 32 Figure 9: Educational Appropriations per FTE State Differences from U.S. Average Over 25 Years and in 2011 (Constant 2011 Dollars) ................................ 35 Figure 10: Total Educational Revenue per FTE State Differences from U.S. Average Over 25 Years and in 2011 (Constant 2011 Dollars) ................................ 37 Figure 11: Percent Change by State in Educational Appropriations and Net Tuition Revenue per FTE, Fiscal 1996-2011 .......................................................... 39 Figure 12: Net Tuition Revenue per FTE and State-Funded Tuition Aid per FTE by State, Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Institutions Only) .................................................... 41
Introduction
Financing higher education requires political leaders, policymakers, and educators to address broad public policy questions, including: What levels of state funding to colleges and universities are necessary to maintain the economic and social well-being of the American people? What tuition levels are appropriate given the costs of higher education, its benefits to individuals, and the desirability of encouraging participation and i mproving degree and certificate attainment? What level of student financial assistance is necessary to provide meaningful educational opportunities to students from low- and moderate-income families? How might colleges and universities use available resources to increase productivity without impairing the quality of services to students?
The State Higher Education Finance (SHEF) report is produced annually by the State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO) to broaden understanding of the context and consequences of multiple decisions made every year in each of these areas. No single report can provide definitive answers to such broad and fundamental questions of public policy, but the SHEF report provides information to help inform such decisions. The report includes: An Overview and Highlights of national trends and the current status of state funding for higher education; An explanation of the Measures, Methods, and Analytical Tools used in the report; A description of the Revenue Sources and Uses for higher education, including state tax and non-tax revenue, local tax support, tuition revenue, and the proportion of this funding available for general educational support; An analysis of National Trends in Enrollment and Revenue, in particular, changes over time in the public resources available for general operating support; Interstate ComparisonsMaking Sense of Many Variables, using tables, charts, and graphs to compare data among states and over time; and Indicators of Relative State Wealth, Tax Effort, and Allocations for Higher Education, along with ways to take these factors into account in making interstate comparisons.
The SHEF report provides the earliest possible review of state and local support, tuition revenue, and enrollment trends for the most recent fiscal year.
Please note: Generally, years referenced in the body of this publication refer to state fiscal years, which commonly start July 1 and run through June 30 of the following calendar year. For example, FY 2011 includes July 2010 through June 2011. All enrollme nts are full-time-equivalent for an academic year (including summer term). National averages are calculated using the sum of all of the states. For example, the national average per FTE expenditure is ca lculate d as the total of all s tates expenditures divided by the total of all s tates FTEs.
State and local support in SHEF is gene rally meant to include funds allocate d to states by the fede ral governme nt through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) and both funds from the Education Stabilization Fund and the Othe r Government Se rvices Fund used to fill shortfalls in s tate support for gene ral ope rating expenses a t public colleges and universities.
State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Higher education has historically experienced large increases in enrollment during times of economic recession, and this tendency has been accentuated by the growing economic importance of postsecondary education. Nationally, FTE enrollment grew 5.4 percent between 2009 and 2010, 2.4 percent between 2010 and 2011, and 33 percent between 2001 and 2011. Highlights of the SHEF report provided below illustrate the long-term patterns, shorter-term changes, and state-level variables affecting the resources available to support higher education between 198 6 and 2011. These and other factors that shape higher education funding are examined in more detail in the sections of the full report that follows.
Figure 1 State, Local, and Net Tuition Revenue Supporting General Operating Expenses of Higher Education U.S., Fiscal Year 2010, Current (unadjusted) Dollars
Figure 2 State, Local, and Net Tuition Revenue Supporting General Operating Expenses of Higher Education U.S., Fiscal Year 2011, Current (unadjusted) Dollars
5. Constant dollar total educational revenue (as displayed in Figure 3, which includes tuition revenue used for capital or debt service) per FTE declined from the late 1980s to the early 1990s from $10,690 in 1988 to $10,199 in 1993. Thereafter, total educational revenue per FTE grew steadily from 1994 to 2001, reaching $11,767, or about 10 percent higher than it was in 1988. Total revenue per FTE then fell sharply (about 10 percent) from 2001 to 2004 (to $10,630), rebounded to $11,733 by 2008, and then dropped to $11,064 in 2011. Rapid enrollment growth is the most significant factor driving these trends. 6. The student share of total educational revenue to support public higher education operations has grown steadily since the early 1980s (see Figure 4). By FY 2011, net tuition made up over 43 percent of total educational revenue.
State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 12. Over the ten-year period 1999 to 2009, total taxable resources per capita increased 33.3 percent, while the effective tax rate increased by 6.3 percent. 13. The proportion of state and local tax revenue allocated to higher education declined slightly over the decade from 7.1 percent in 1999 to 6.9 percent in 2009.
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Looking Ahead
The long-term enrollment growth documented by SHEF reports illustrates the importance of higher education to the American people. That importance is further underscored by the resiliency of state support per student in the economic recoveries following previous recessions. Those recoveries notwithstanding, students and their families have persistently been asked to shoulder a larger share of the cost of public higher education in the United States. The depth and breadth of the 2008 recession and the challenges of financing health care and retirement costs for an aging population leave little room for hope that trend can easily be reversed. While serving continuing enrollment demand is an urgent fiscal priority, health care inflation and retirement expenses are also significant cost drivers in higher education. These broadly recognized pressures on public resources compound the financial challenges facing colleges and universities. During the past three years, 2009, 2010, and 2011, with the assistance of ARRA funding, total state and local support hovered between $87 and $88 billion, almost as high as the nearly $89 billion provided in 2008. In 2011 state and local funding grew enough to offset a decrease in ARRA funds. But 2012 state appropriations are down by 4.0 percent, and when ARRA funds for 2011 are included for comparison the total is down 7.5%. Total funding (including federal stimulus funds) for 2012 is approximately $5.9 billion less than provided in 2011 as reported by Grapevine (online at www.grapevine.ilstu.edu and in Grapevine Tables 1 and 2 in Appendix A of this report). (Local tax support of about $9 billion in 2011 is included in SHEF but these data are not yet available for 2012.) According to the National Association of State Budget Officers, state revenue has fallen at an unprecedented rate and full recovery will, at best, take several years. This prognosis, combined with the declining availability of ARRA state fiscal stabilization funds, suggests that 2013 is likely to be a very challenging budget year in many states. As shown in the comparative state statistics, conditions in individual states vary dramatically from the national trends described in this report. Every state, however, faces similar questions in meeting the growing needs of its people and communities for higher education, as well as for other public services. The comparative and trend information in this report can assist policy leaders in every state as they deter mine their goals for higher education and develop strategies for pursuing them.
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SHEF does not prov ide a meas ure of net price, a term tha t gene rally refers to the cost of attending college after deducting ass istance provided by fede ral, sta te, and ins titutional gra nts. SHEF does not deduct fede ral g rant ass ista nce (primarily from Pel l Grants ) from g ross tuition revenue, since these are non-sta te funds that substitute, at least in part, for non-tuition costs borne by students. Non-tuition costs (room and board, trans portation, books, and incidentals) typically total $10,000 or more annually in addition to tuition cos ts. This requires students with a low expected family contribution (mos t Pell re cipie nts) to augment federal grants with a substantial contribution from pa rttime work or loans, even at a compa ratively low-tuition public institution. In addition, the availability of fede ral tuition tax credits since 1999 has helped re duce net price for middle- and lower-middle-income stude nts. While these tax credits have no impact on the ne t tuition revenue received by institutions, they do reduce the ne t price paid by stude nts. SHEFs net tuition revenue statistic is not a measure of net price, but a measure of the revenues institutions received from tuition. It is a straightforward measure of the proportion of public institution instructional costs borne by students and families. Measures of net price for the student need to include non-tuition costs and all forms of aid.
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Technical Papers A, B and C appended to this report describe these adjustments in some detail. Tables provided in these technical papers show the actual effects of the COLA and EMI adjustments on the data provided by individual states, as well as the HECA adjustment from current to constant dollars (inflation-adjusted dollar values that are made annually to reflect inflation). Additional appendices provide a glossary of terms and definitions, a copy of the data collection instructions, and a list of state data providers.
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Focus on the major purposes for state spending on higher education and how these investments are allocated; Assess trends in the proportion or share that students and families are paying for higher education; See how funding of their states higher education system compares to other states; and Assess the capacity of their state economy and tax policies to generate revenue to support public priorities such as higher education.
While making finance data cleaner, consistent, and more comparable, SHEFs analytic methods also add complexity. All comparisons can claim only to be "valid, more or less," and SHEF is no exception. Analysts with knowledge of particular states probably know of other factors that should be taken into account, or that could mislead comparative analysis. SHEEO continues to welcome all efforts to improve the quality of its data and analytical tools. We urge readers and users to help us improve both methods and understanding. Many educators and policymakers (and segments of the public) may look to interstate financial analysis to determine "appropriate" or "sufficient" funding for higher education. But sufficiency is meaningful only in the context of a particular states objectives and circumstances. State leaders, educators, and others must work together to set goals and develop strategies to achieve those goals, and then determine the amount and allocations of funds required for success. Whether the objective is to sustain competitive advantage or to improve the postsecondary education system, money is always an issue. With additional resources, educators can serve more students at higher levels of quality. But more spending does not necessarily yield proportional increases in quantity or quality.3 Efficiency is a thorny issue in educational finance; educators always can find good uses for additional resources, and resources always are limited. If educators and policymakers can agree that it is highly desirable to achieve widespread educational attainment more cost-effectively, they can work together to increase educational productivity. Authentic productivity gains require sustained effort, a combination of investing in priorities , and finding efficiencies through incentives, reallocation, and innovation. The question, "How much funding is enough?" has no easy answer at the state or national level. Educators and policymakers must work together to address such key questions as: What kind of higher education system do we want? What will it take, given our circumstances, to establish and sustain such a system? Are we making effective use of our current investments? Where would an incremental or reallocated dollar lead to improved outcomes and help to meet state goals?
Good financial data and analysis are essential for addressing such questions.
Jones, D., and Kelly, P. (2005). A new look at the institutional component of higher education finance: A guide for evaluating performance relative to financial resources. Boulder, CO: NCHEMS.
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Major uses of the $87.5 billion in 2011 state and local government funding for higher education included: $68 billion (about 78 percent) for general operating expenses of public higher education institutions. $10.4 billion (11.9 percent) for special-purpose appropriationsresearch, agricultural extension, and medical education. In 2008, states devoted to 12.6% of state and local government funding to these programs. State-funded student financial aid programs, including state-funded programs for students attending independent as well as public institutions, accounted for about 9.8 percent of the funds used. States spent 7.1 percent of state and local government funding on student financial aid programs at public institutions, up from 5.6% in 2006. Direct support of independent institutions was reported in 12 states with such state-funded programs and made up 0.2 percent of the funds used.
Supplemental SHEF Tables, which are available at www.sheeo.org, provide more-deta iled data and tables on state-by-state sources and uses of highe r education funding for 2011. As noted in the exam ples below, revenue s ources vary conside rably across states a nd from the national averages.
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Table 1 Major Sources and Uses of State and Local Government Support Fiscal 2006-2011 (Dollars in Millions)
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Educational Appropriations Constant dollar educational appropriations per FTE (see the blue bars in Figure 3) reached a high of $8,316 in 2001. Following four years of decline (2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005), per student educational appropriations increased in 2006, 2007, and 2008, recovering to $7,488 and then declining each of the last three years to $6,290 in 2011. Appropriations per FTE were lower in 2010 and 2011 (in constant dollars) than in any year since 1980.
Net Tuition Revenue The rate of increase in net tuition was slower in 2007 and 2008 than in the previous three years, but in 2010 and 2011 net tuition grew again as a percentage of total educational revenue. The rate of growth in net tuition revenue has been particularly steep during periods when state and local support have fallen short of inflation and enrollment growth, typically during and immediately following economic recessions.
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Figure 3 Public FTE Enrollment and Educational Appropriations per FTE, U.S., Fiscal 1986-2011
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Detailed state-level information can be found in the Supplemental SHEF Tables (www.sheeo.org).
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Table 3 Higher Education Finance Indicators (Constant Adjusted 2011 Dollars in Millions)
In
dicat
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Figure 4
Net Tuition as a Percent of Public Higher Education Total Educational Revenue, U.S. Fiscal 1986-2011
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Figure 5 (and the accompanying data in Table 4) shows change in full-time-equivalent enrollment (FTE) in public higher education by state for the five years between 2006 and 2011. All fifty states have seen enrollment growth over the last five years , ranging from 8.7 percent in Maine to 33.6% in Oregon. The 24 states in which enrollment growth exceeded the national average of 16.9 percent include both large and small states, high and low population growth states, and several states where enrollment increased much faster than overall population changes. Sixteen states saw enrollment growth of more than 20 percent.
Between 2010 and 2011, nearly every state experienced enrollment growth, but California, where substantial tuition increases and enrollment caps were imposed, saw a reduction of 2.8%, or 50,000 students.
Figure 5 Full-Time-Equivalent (FTE) Enrollment in Public Higher Education Percent Change by State, Fiscal 2006-2011
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Figure 6 (and the accompanying data in Table 5) shows the percent change by state in higher education appropriations per public FTE student between 2006 and 2011. The national average per FTE funding for 2011 is lower than 2010 by 3.7 percent (see Table 5), and 12.5 percent lower than 2006. Seven states increased constant dollar per student support for public institutions during this five-year period. Forty-three states decreased constant dollar per student funding during this five-year period, seventeen by more than 20 percent. Thirty-one states utilized federal funds available through the American Recovery and Reinves tment Act to fill shortfalls in state support for general operating expenses at public colleges and universities. ARRA revenues totaled $2.8 billion in 2011.
Figure 6 Educational Appropriations per FTE Percent Change by State, Fiscal 2006-2011
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Figure 7 shows net tuition revenue as a percent of total educational revenue for public higher education by state for 2011. The accompanying Table 6 shows the dollar values of the net tuition per FTE by state. Table 6 also shows the amount of net tuition per FTE used for debt service, as reported by each state. States vary widely in the percent of educational revenue supported by net tuition, from a low of 11.4 percent in Wyoming to a high of 83.3 percent in Vermont. Thirty states are above the national average of 43.3 percent in the proportion of educational revenue from tuition sources. Twelve states report using some portion of net tuition revenue for debt service. The amount used in 2011 ranges from $810 per FTE to $16 per FTE. Nationally, only about $47 of net tuition per FTE was used for debt service in 2011.
Figure 7 Net Tuition as a Percent of Public Higher Education Total Educational Revenue by State, Fiscal 2011
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Table 6 Public Higher Education Net Tuition Revenue per FTE (Constant Adjusted 2011 Dollars)
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Figure 8 (and the accompanying data in Table 7) shows the percent change by state in total educational revenue per FTE in public higher education from 2006 to 2011. Total revenue per FTE in 2011 is slightly lower than in 2010 and 2.3 percent lower than in 2006 (see Table 7), which is a reflection of the growing student share of total educational revenue. Twenty-four states increased total educational revenue per student between 2006 and 2011. In 26 states, total educational revenue per FTE decreased. The U.S. average showed a 2.3 percent decrease in educational revenue per FTE from 2006 to 2011.
Figure 8 Total Educational Revenue per FTE Percent Change by State, Fiscal 2006-2011
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Table 7 Total Educational Revenue per FTE (Constant Adjusted 2011 Dollars)
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Figure 9 illustrates the variability in per FTE educational appropriations by state. The blue bars display the average of the differences between states educational appropriations per FTE and the national educational appropriations per FTE across the years 1986-2011. The red bars represent the FY 2011 differences between the states per FTE educational appropriations and the U.S. per FTE educational appropriations. In 22 states, the educational appropriations per FTE have been higher, on average, than the national educational appropriations per FTE over the last 25 years. Comparing the red (current difference in per FTE educational appropriations) and blue (historical average difference in per FTE educational appropriations) bars gives a general indication of state support relative to the national average in the current year compared with a states historical trend. Twenty-two states had higher than average educational appropriations per FTE in 2011. Of those, 16 had higher educational appropriations per FTE compared to the U.S. in 2011 than they had, on average, across the years 1986-2011. Twenty-eight states had lower than average educational appropriations per FTE in 2011. Nineteen of those had lower educational appropriations per FTE compared to the U.S. in 2011 than they had, on average, across the years 1986-2011. The 2011 difference between the state and U.S. educational appropriations per FTE was more than $1000 higher than the historical average difference in five states; it was more than $1000 lower than the historical average difference in five states.
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Figure 9 Educational Appropriations per FTE State Differences from U.S. Average Over 25 Years and in 2011 (Constant Adjusted 2011 Dollars)
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Figure 10 illustrates the variability in per FTE total educational revenue by state. The blue bars display the average of the differences between state total educational revenue per FTE and the national total educational revenue per FTE from 1986-2011. The red bars represent the FY 2011 difference between the state per FTE total educational revenue and the U.S. per FTE total educational revenue. In 28 states, the total educational revenue per FTE has been higher, on average, than the national total educational revenue per FTE over the last 25 years. Comparing the red (current difference in per FTE total educational revenue) and blue (historical average difference in per FTE total educational revenue) bars gives a general indication of state support relative to the national average in the current year compared with a states historical trend. Twenty-four states had higher than average total educational revenue per FTE in 2011. Of those, 20 had higher total educational revenue per FTE compared to the U.S. in 2011 than they had, on average, across the years 1986-2011. Twenty-six states had lower than average total educational revenue per FTE in 2011. Eighteen of those had lower total educational revenue per FTE compared to the U.S. in 2011 than they had, on average, across the years 1986-2011. The 2011 difference between the state and U.S. total educational revenue per FTE was more than $1000 higher than the historical average difference in seven states; it was more than $1000 lower than the historical average difference in six states.
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Figure 10 Total Educational Revenue per FTE State Differences from U.S. Average Over 25 Years and in 2011 (Constant Adjusted 2011 Dollars)
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Figure 11 Percent Change by State in Educational Appropriations and Net Tuition Revenue per FTE Fiscal 1996-2011
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Many states provide funding for student financial aid programs in order to help offset the cost of tuition. In Figure 12, points along the horizontal axis represent 2010 net tuition revenue per FTE for each state. Ordering along the vertical axis reflects per student state funding intended to help students pay public institution tuition during 2011. States in the upper right quadrant exceeded the national average in both net tuition revenue and tuition aid. States in the lower right quadrant exceeded the national average in net tuition revenue, but fell below the national average in tuition aid. States in the lower left quadrant lagged the national average in both net tuition revenue and tuition aid. States in the upper left quadrant lagged the national average in net tuition, and exceeded the national average in tuition aid.
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Figure 12 Net Tuition Revenue per FTE and State-Funded Tuition Aid per FTE by State, Fiscal 2011 (Public Institutions Only)
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Opinions vary widely about a host of issues concerning taxes, public services, and public investments. Differences of opinion and ideology combine with conditions in the economy and demography to affect state taxing and spending decisions. As these conditions change, policymakers reevaluate taxation and spending policies. No single standard exists to evaluate public policy decisions with respect to funding for higher education. Relevant, comparative information about states can, however, help inform higher education financing decisions. This section explores several types of comparative data and indicators, including relative state and personal wealth, tax capacity and effort, and comparative allocations to higher education.6 Nationally, effective state and local tax rates increased slightly over the last decade. As shown in Table 8, based on a combination of federal government data sources: Aggregate state wealth (total taxable resources) per capita increased 33.3 percent from 1999 to 2009, from $37,528 to $50,014. The effects of the 2008 recession are evident, however, in 2009 numbers. Total taxable resources per capita reached a high of $53,612 in 2007, declining 1.0 percent to $53,071 in 2008 and another 5.8 percent to $50,014 in 2009. Total state and local tax revenue per capita increased 41.7 percent from $2,917 in 1999 to $4,133 in 2009, but declined from 2008 to 2009. As a result, the national aggregate effective state and local tax rate (tax revenue as a percentage of state wealth) increased from 7.77 percent to 8.26 percent over this period.
Also based on aggregate, national data, the allocation of the available state revenue to higher education fluctuated somewhat between 1999 and 2009. Of total state and local revenue (including lottery proceeds), the allocation to higher education ranged from 6.4 percent to 7.6 percent during this period. In 2009, the most recent year available, the percentage allocation to higher education was 6.9 percent, slightly higher than in 2008 but still lower than the percentages reached from 1999 through 2003.
Part of this section draws on previous work by Ke nt Halstead to assemble data and develop indicators for higher e ducation s upport per capita and relative to wealth (personal income), state tax capacity, and tax effort.
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Table 8 State Wealth, Tax Revenue, Effective Tax Rates, and Higher Education Allocation U.S., 1999-2009 (Current Unadjusted Dollars)
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 In Table 9, state tax revenue per capita, total taxable resources per capita, and the effective tax rates are indexed to the national average in order to indicate the variability across states relative to the national average. Taxable resources per capita vary by more than a factor of two, from a low of $36,070 per capita to a high of $75,256 per capita. Effective tax rates also vary substantially, from a low of 5.4 percent to a high of 13.5 percent. Table 10, based on federal data sources, shows two measures of state-by-state support for higher education (per capita and per $1,000 in personal income) for 2010. Per capita support for higher education averages $282 nationally and ranges from $110 in New Hampshire to $605 in Wyoming. Support for higher education relative to personal income varies from $2.52 to $14.64 per $1,000 of personal income across the states. Nationally, state and local support for higher education per $1,000 of personal income was $7.08 in 2010. These comparative statistics reflect interstate differences in wealth, population characteristics and density, participation rates, the relative size of the public and independent higher education sectors, student mobility, and numerous other factors. Poorer states often lag the national average in per capita support, but exceed the national average in support per thousand dollars of personal income. Similarly, sparsely populated states often exceed the national average in both per capita support and per thousand dollars of personal income. Table 10 also provides an analysis of state support as a percentage of state budgets in 200 9. While such statistics show relative investments in higher education, they do not necessarily indicate the relative "priority" or valuation of higher education by each state. They do reflect the different paths states have taken in financing a set of public purposes as they assess need, urgency, and financing options. As previously discussed, tuition revenue frequently (but not universally) has increased when state and local sources of support have not kept pace with enrollment growth and inflation. The data in Table 8, indicating an increase in the effective state tax rate combined with the pressures created by growing higher education enrollment, increasing demands for elementary and secondary funding, rising Medicaid costs, and other factors, help explain the stress on state budgets and policymakers. Pursuing the goals of assuring higher education access, determining appropriate l evels of support, and sorting out "who pays, who benefits," in the context of state needs, resources, and other policy objectives, remains a complex task in every state.
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Table 9 Tax Revenues, Taxable Resources, and Effective Tax Rates, by State, Fiscal 2009
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Table 10 Perspectives on State and Local Government Higher Education Funding Effort by State
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Conclusion
Since the beginning of the 21 st century, higher education enrollments have grown faster than any decade since the 1960s. Simultaneously, state and local funding for higher education stagnated twice due to recessions. From 2002 to 2004, total state and local funding hovered around $70 billion. Then over the four years 2005 to 2008 state and local support for public higher education grew to $88.9 billion, partially restoring the per-student support eroded by the 2001 recession. This four-year recovery abruptly ended when, in 2008, the nation suffered the worst recession since the Great Depression. From 2008 to 2011 enrollments grew by an additional 12.5%; but state and local support, even with the assistance of the federal economic stimulus funds, has stagnated, declining modestly for the nation as a whole, and falling dramatically in some states. As is evident in this report, institutions have stretched to accommodate enrollment demand, students and their families have paid higher tuition, and expenditures per student have fallen in nearly every state. While no solid data on 2012 enrollments are available, 2012 state appropriations have fallen dramatically (by 4.0%) and ARRA funds are exhausted. Considered together, state appropriations and ARRA funds are down 7.5% from 2011 to 2012. The 2011 enrollment decline of 50,000 students in California, probably due to dramatic tuition increases and enrollment caps, may well presage similar losses of enrollment in other states. In the past decade these two recessions and the larger macro-economic challenges facing the United States have created what some are calling the new normal for state funding for public higher education and other public services. In the new normal retirement and health care costs simultaneously drive up the cost of higher education, and compete with education for limited public resources. The new normal no longer expects to see a recovery of state support for higher education such as occurred repeatedly in the last half of the 20 th century. The new normal expects students and their families to continue to make increasingly greater financial sacrifices in order to complete a postsecondary education. The new normal expects schools and colleges to find ways of increasing productivity and absorb ever-larger budget cuts, while increasing degree production without, we hope, compromising quality. One cannot responsibly ignore either the financial realities outlined in this report or the larger economic challenges facing the American people. Somehow the nation and its educators must come to grips with these realities and create effective responses to them. Colleges and universities must find ways to reduce student attrition, the cost of instruction, and time to a degree, while improving instruction and increasing the numbers of students who graduate ready to be productive citizens. Parents, students, institutions, and states must make tough decisions about prioritieswhat investments are essential for a better future and where can we and should we reduce spending on non-essentials in order to secure what is essential? But avoiding bad judgments can be difficult when facing tough choices. Institutions may cut too many quality corners or compete with each other to raise revenues from new sources (such as out-of-state or international students) rather than make difficult decisions about priorities or the extra effort to implement innovative practices. Policy makers may overestimate how many students can be well-educated within existing resources and underestimate the long-term negative effects of budget cuts or tuition increases on access to higher education and the quality of our workforce. Or the better-off public may be lulled into thinking that the American economy can get by with limited opportunity and 20 th century standards for educational attainment, so long as their own families are well-educated. The educational and economic edge the United States once enjoyed in comparison to other nations is eroding rapidly. Sound judgments about priorities and an extra measure of commitment and creativity are needed in order to regain our educational and economic momentum. The data and analysis of this and future SHEF reports are intended to help higher education leaders and state policymakers focus on how discrete, year-to-year decisions fit into broader patterns of change over time, and to help them make decisions in the coming years that will meet the longer-term needs of the American people.
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Technical Paper A
The Higher Education Cost Adjustment: A Proposed Tool for Assessing Inflation in Higher Education Costs Introduction
Prices charged to students, the total cost of higher education, and the effect of inflation are all important issues for the public, state and federal governments, and colleges and universities. This brief Technical Paper discusses two relevant dimensions of inflation in higher educationthe consumer and the provider perspectivesand describes a tool to benchmark the inflation experienced by providers, colleges, and universities.
Economic Report of the President. February 2007. Appendix B, table B-60: " Consume r Price Inde xes for Major Expenditure Classes" (www.gpoaccess.gov/eop/2007/B60.xls). 8 Source: Washington Higher E ducation Coordina ting Board 9 Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 colleges and universities. To estimate price changes for components in this market basket, Halstead used trends in faculty salaries collected by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), and a number of price indices generated by federal agencies. Dr. Halstead last updated the HEPI in 2001, using regression analysis to estimate price increases for more recent years. Since 2005, Commonfund Institute has maintained the HEPI project, continuing to provide yearly updates to the data based on a regression analysis. The HEPI has made an important contribution to understanding the cost increases borne by colleges and universities. Over the past years, the State Higher Education Executive Officers association (SHEEO) and chief fiscal officers of higher education agencies discussed the feasibility and desirability of a fresh analysis of higher education cost inflation and reached the following conclusions: While the HEPI has been useful, it has not been universally accepted because it is a privately developed analysis, and one of its main components, average faculty salaries, has been criticized as self-referential. The HEPI has not diverged dramatically from other inflation indices over short time periods. Hence, many policymakers reference indices such as the CPI-U in annual budget deliberations, especially in budgeting for projected price increases. It would be costly to update, refine, and maintain the HEPI in such a way that would meet professional standards for price indexing. The most labor-intensive work would be in refreshing the data in the higher education market basket.
For these reasons, SHEEO decided not to develop a successor to the HEPI. But, over an extended period of time, differences between the market basket of higher education cost increases and the CPI market basket cost increases are material. The most fundamental problem is that the largest expenditure for higher education is salaries for educated people. In the past 20 years, such people have demanded increasingly higher compensation in both the private and public sectors, including colleges and universities. SHEEO developed the Higher Education Cost Adjustment (HECA) as an alternative to the CPI -U and the HEPI for estimating inflation in the costs paid by colleges and universities. HECA is constructed from two federally developed and maintained price indicesthe Employment Cost Index (ECI) and the Gross Domestic Product Implicit Price Deflator (GDP IPD). The ECI reflects employer compensation costs including wages, salaries, and benefits.10 The GDP IPD reflects general price inflation in the U.S. economy.11 The HECA has the following advantages: 1. It is constructed from measures of inflation in the broader U.S. economy; 2. It is simple, straightforward to calculate, and transparent; and 3. The underlying indices are developed and routinely updated by the Bureaus of Labor Statistics and Economic Analysis. Because the best available data suggest that faculty and staff salaries account for roughly 75 percent of college and university expenditures, the HECA is based on a market basket with two components personnel costs (75 percent of the index), and non-personnel costs (25 percent). SHEEO constructed the HECA based on the growth of the ECI (for 75 percent of costs) and the growth of the GDP IPD (for 25 percent of costs).
10
The Employment Cost Index (E CI) for White Collar Workers (excluding sales occupations), which has traditionally been used in SHEF, was discontinue d in March 2006. The ECI for management, professional, and related occupations (not seasonally adjusted) is the cl osest to the discontinued inde x and is now used in SHEF. This index is available to 2001, and historical SHEF data have been adjusted to represent this new series. Gross Domes tic Product (GDP) is the total ma rket value of all final goods and se rvices produce d in the country in a given yea r. It is e qual to total consume r, investment, and government spending, plus the value of exports, minus the value of imports. The GDP Implicit Price Def lator is current dollar GDP divided by consta nt dolla r GDP. This ratio is used to account for the effects of inflation by reflecting the change in the prices of the bundle of goods that make up the GDP as well as changes to the bundle itself.
11
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Technical Paper Table 1 displays three indicesthe CPI-U, HEPI, and HECAfor the years 1996 to 2011. For comparison purposes, per capita income growth is shown.
Technical Paper Table 1 CPI-U, HEPI, and HECA Indexed to Fiscal Year 2011
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Technical Paper B
Adjusting for Interstate Differences in Cost of Living and Enrollment Mix
It is difficult to compare interstate higher education unit costs. The analytical tools available are, at best, blunt instruments for measuring differences. Nevertheless, blunt instruments can be better than no instruments at all. This technical paper briefly describes two approaches for assessing the relative significance of two factors cost of living and the enrollment mix among institutions. The cost of living varies greatly across the 50 states. The most significant difference is in median housing values. In the 2005 American Community Survey census, median housing value was $167,500 for the nation, but ranged from $84,400 to $477,000 across different regions and states. Enrollment mix also poses a challenge for interstate financial comparisons. Each level of higher education, from the lowest undergraduate work through doctoral studies, is progressively more expensive. A state or institution with a large proportion of enrollment in graduate programs will normally have a higher cost per FTE than a state or institution with a larger proportion of enrollment in undergraduate and two-year degree programs.
12
Berry, W.D., R.C. Fording, and R.L. Hanson. Cost of Living Index for the American States, 1960-2003. (Available at ICPSR PublicationRelated A rchive, study # 1275 http://webapp.icpsr.umich.edu/ cocoon/ICPSR-STUDY/01275.xml)
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 sectors, the most common of which are: Doctoral Research Extensive ($19,604); Doctoral Research Intensive ($14,460); Masters Colleges and Universities I ($12,199); and Associate Colleges ($8,829). 2. The proportion of each state's FTE in each of the Carnegie Classifications was calculated for fall 200 8, and then multiplied by the national average cost per FTE in FY 2009 for each respective classification. For each state, the products for each Classification were summed, which yields the states enrollment mix unit cost for the year. If the state has relatively more enrollment in higher cost Carnegie Classifications (e.g., research universities) the enrollment mix unit cost will surpass the aggregated national unit cost. If the state has relatively more enrollment in lower cost Carnegie Classifications (e.g., community colleges) the enrollment mix unit cost will be less than the aggregated national unit cost. 3. The ratio of enrollment mix unit cost to aggregated national unit cost constitutes each state's enrollment mix "index." For example, the enrollment mix index for California in FY 2009 equals 0.913 because California has a large community college system. This calculation illustrates that, if unit costs in each sector were at the national average, the statewide cost per FTE would be lower than the aggregated national unit cost by nine percent. Each SHEF adjustment is expressed in index values where the national average equals 1.00. Hence, actual expenditures per FTE are divided by the SHEF adjustment in order to obtain the adjusted value. For example, presume that State X has an actual expenditure per FTE of $8,000. If the cost of living index for State X equals 1.05, its expenditure per FTE, adjusted for differences in the cost of living, would be $7,619 ($8,000 / 1.05). If State X has an enrollment mix index of 0.98, its expenditure per FTE, adjusted for differences in enrollment mix, would be $8,163 ($8,000 / .98). When both adjustments are made, State X would have an adjusted expenditure per FTE of $7,775 ($8,000 / 1.05 / .98). Technical Paper Table 2 shows the EMI, COLA, and combined EMI and COLA measures for each state. Technical Paper Table 3 summarizes results for the SHEF adjustments for interstate cost of living and enrollment mix differences among the states. SHEEO welcomes comments on the utility and limitations of these analytical tools and any suggestions for improvement.
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Technical Paper Table 2 Enrollment Mix Index and Cost of Living Adjustments by State
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Technical Paper Table 3 Impact of Enrollment Mix Index and Cost of Living Adjustments by State
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Technical Paper C
Diverse Perspectives on State Higher Education Finance Data
Understanding state support for higher education is complicated by the various perspectives of organizations that measure monetary support. Aside from SHEF, two annual studies are national in scope and report different numbers based on unique definitions and data elementsIllinois State University's Grapevine survey and the National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO) State Expenditure Report. Further complicating the issue, states observe different practices in collecting and reporting data. For example, as reported by NASBO, in FY 2010, eleven states exclude all or some of tuition and fees in state expenditures for higher education and nineteen states exclude all or part of student loan programs. Reconciling these differences (both at the data collection and state levels) may be impossible; understanding them, however, is essential for interpreting information on state trends in financing higher education from different sources. The following summarizes data collected by SHEEO, NASBO, and Grapevine.
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Funding under state auspices for non-appropriated state support (such as monies from receipt of lease income and oil/mineral extraction fees on land set aside for public institution benefit). Interest or earnings received from state funded endowments set aside for public sector institutions. Portions of multi-year appropriations from previous years. Any other sources of state funding for higher education operations not listed above.
Excluded items include appropriations for capital outlays and debt service, and appropriations of sums derived from federal sources, student tuition and fee revenues, and auxiliary enterprises.
States are also requested to include capital spending (for some states this can be substantial, and it tends to vary widely from year to year). Exclusions include federal research grants and university endowments.
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Like the "Halstead studies," the SHEEO study: Analyzes state support for higher education, setting aside support in categories that vary widely among states (research, medical education, and agricultural extension services) so as to focus the analysis on appropriations for instruction and public service in more comparable areas; Collects annual student FTE enrollment data to calculate more comparable estimates of state support per student; Examines state support for higher education in the context of a state's capacity to raise revenue from taxation; Examines the relative contribution of students to the cost of public higher education; and Examines interstate differences in the cost of living and in the enrollment mix among different types of institutions.
Additionally, SHEEO's annual survey provides information on: State support for the education of students attending independent colleges and universities (direct state grants to institutions, or financial aid to students). State support of higher education operations through non-tax revenue, including lottery proceeds, royalties from natural resources, and state-supported endowments. Trends in state support for research, medical education, and agricultural extension services. State-supported student financial assistance.
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Grapevine Table 2 One-, Two-, and Five-Year Percent Changes in State Fiscal Support for Higher Education
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Enrollment
Full-Time-Equivalent Enrollment (FTE). A measure of enrollment equal to one student enrolled full -time for one academic year, based on all credit hours (including summer sessions). The SHEF data capture FTE enrollment in public institutions of higher education from those credit or contact hours associated with courses that apply to a degree or certificate, excluding non-credit continuing education, adult education, and extension courses. If courses meet the "formal award potential" criterion, they may include vocational-technical, remedial, and other program enrollment at two-year community colleges and state-approved area vocational -technical centers. Medical school enrollment is reported but set aside from the net FTE used in "funding per FTE" calculations because states vary widely in the extent of medical school funding. The FTE calculation differs with the type and level of instruction: Contact hour courses: One annual FTE is the sum of total contact hours divided by 900.
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Undergraduate credit hour courses: One annual FTE is the sum of total credits divided by 30 (for semester-based calendar systems) or 45 (for quarter systems). Graduate and first-professional credit hour courses: One annual FTE is the sum of total credits divided by 24 (for semester systems) or 36 (for quarter systems). Source: SSDB.
Revenue
Appropriations. Money set aside by formal legislative action for a specific use. Educational Appropriations.13 Net State Support plus Local Tax Appropriations minus Research, Agricultural, and Medical (RAM) appropriations. Source: SSDB. Gross State Support. The sum of State Tax Appropriations plus: Funding under state auspices for appropriated non-tax state support (e.g., lotteries, casinos, and tobacco settlement funds) set aside for higher education; Funding under state auspices for non-appropriated state support (e.g., monies from receipt of lease income, cattle grazing rights, and oil/mineral extraction fees on land) set aside for higher education; Sums destined for higher education but appropriated to some other state agency (e.g., administered funds or funds intended for faculty/staff fringe benefits that are appropriated to the state treasurer); Interest or earnings received from state-funded endowments pledged to public sector institutions; and Portions of multi-year appropriations from previous years. Source: SSDB.
Local Tax Appropriations. Annual appropriations from local government taxes for public higher education institution operating expenses. Source: SSDB. Net State Support. State support for public higher education annual operating expenses. The difference resulting from Gross State Support less: Appropriations returned to the state; State-appropriated funds derived from federal sources; Portions of multi-year appropriations to be distributed over subsequent years; Tuition charges remitted to the state to offset state appropriations; Tuition and fees used for capital debt service and capital improvement (other than that paid by students for auxiliary enterprise debt service); State funding for students in non-credit continuing or adult education courses and non-credit extension courses; Sums appropriated to independent institutions for capital outlay or operating expenses; Allocation of appropriations for financial aid grants to students attending in-state independent institutions; and Allocation of appropriations for financial aid grants to students attending out-of-state institutions. Source: SSDB.
13
For FY 2009 through FY 2011, educa tional appropriations includes funds allocated to states by the federal government through the Ame rican Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), specifically those funds from the Education Stabilization Fund and Othe r Government Services Fund that were to be used to fill shortfalls in s tate support for genera l ope rating e xpenses at public colleges and universities. In FY 2011, this totaled to $2.8 billion
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State Higher Education Finance FY 2011 Personal Income. The income received by all persons from participation in production, from government and business transfer payments, and from government interest. Personal income is the sum of net earnings by place of residence, rental income, personal dividend income, personal interest income, and transfer payments. Net earnings is earnings by place of work (wage and salary disbursements, and proprietors' income) less personal contributions for social insurance, including an adjustment to convert earnings by place of work to earnings by place of residence. Personal income is measured before the deduction of personal income taxes and is reported in current dollars. Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Office of Economic Policy, U.S. Department of Treasury. Research, Agricultural, and Medical Appropriations (RAM). Special purpose appropriations targeted by legislative budget line-item identification or institutional designation for the direct operation and administrative support of research centers and institutes, agricultural experiment stations, cooperative extension services, teaching hospitals, health care public services, and four types of medical schoolsmedical, osteopathic, dental, and veterinary. Source: SSDB. State Tax Appropriations. Appropriations from state government taxes for public and private higher education institution and agency annual operating expenses, excluding capital outlay (for new construction or debt retirement) and revenue from auxiliary enterprises. These sums are largely the same as those reported as part of the annual Grapevine survey of the Center for the Study of Higher Education Policy at Illinois State University. Source: Grapevine, as reported to SHEEO. Student Share. The share of Total Educational Revenue from students or their families. Net Tuition Revenue as a percentage of Total Educational Revenue. Source: SSDB. Total Educational Revenue. The sum of Educational Appropriations and Net Tuition Revenue. Source: SSDB.
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Florida Alicia D. Trexler Director, Office of Budget and Finanacial services The Florida College System Budget Office/FDOE 325 W Gaines Street, Suite 1224B Tallahassee, FL 32399-0400 (850) 245-9390 Alicia.Trexler@fldoe.org Kristie Harris Budget Director State University System of Florida Board of Governors 325 West Gaines Street, Suite 1614 Tallahassee, FL (850) 245-9757 Kristie.Harris@flbog.edu Matthew Bouck Administrator, Statewide Course Numbering System Florida Department of Education 1401 Turlington Bldg. 325 West Gaines St. Tallahassee, FL 32399-0400 (850) 245-9544 Matthew.Bouck@fldoe.org Georgia Ken Kincaid Chief Financial Officer Technical College System of Georgia 1800 Century Place Atlanta, GA 30345 (404) 679-1706 kkincaid@tcsg.edu Tracey Cook Assistant Vice Chancellor for Fiscal Affairs/Budget Director Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia 270 Washington Street, SW Atlanta, GA 30334 (404) 656-2276 Tracey.Cook@usg.edu
Hawaii Dennis Nishino Program and Budget Manager University of Hawai`i System 2444 Dole Street University Budget Office Honolulu, HI 96822 (808) 956-8513 nishino@hawaii.edu Iowa Patrice Sayre Chief Business Officer Board of Regents, State of Iowa 11260 Aurora Avenue Urbandale, IA 50322-7905 (515) 281-6421 psayre@iastate.edu Idaho Scott Christie Financial Manager Idaho State Board of Education PO Box 83720 Boise, ID 83720 (208) 332-1581 scott.christie@osbe.idaho.gov Illinois Matt Berry Assistant Director, Fiscal Affairs Illinois Board of Higher Education 431 East Adams, 2nd Floor Springfield, IL 62701-1404 (217) 557-7348 berry@ibhe.org Alan D. Phillips Deputy Director for Fiscal Affairs, Budgeting, and Information Technology Illinois Board of Higher Education 431 East Adams, 2nd Floor Springfield, MA 62701-1404 (217) 557-7353 phillips@ibhe.org
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Indiana Jason D. Dudich Associate Commissioner and Chief Financial Officer Indiana Commission for Higher Education 101 West Ohio Street, Suite 550 Indianapolis, IN 46204-1971 (317) 464-4400 jasond@che.in.gov Kansas Dawn Ressell Associate Vice President for Accountability, Planning, & Institutional Effectiveness Kansas Board of Regents 1000 SW Jackson Street, Suite 520 Topeka, KS 66614-1111368 (785) 368-7464 dressel@ksbor.org Diane C. Duffy Vice President of Finance & Administration Kansas Board of Regents 1000 SW Jackson Street, Suite 520 Topeka, KS 66612-1368 (785) 296-3421 dduffy@ksbor.org Kentucky William Payne Senior Associate, Finance Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education 1024 Capital Center Drive, Suite 320 Frankfort, KY 40601 (502) 573-1555 bill.payne@ky.gov John C. Hayek Senior Vice President, Budget, Planning and Policy Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education 1024 Capital Center Drive, Suite 320 Frankfort, KY 40601-8204 (502) 573-1555 john.hayek@ky.gov
Louisiana Barbara Goodson Associate Commissioner for Finance and Administration Louisiana Board of Regents 1201 N. Third Street, Suite 6-200 Baton Rouge, LA 70802 (225) 342-4253 Barbara.goodson@regents.la.gov Massachusetts Jonathan Keller Associate Commissioner for Research, Planning, and Information Systems Massachusetts Department of Higher Education One Ashburton Place, Room 1401 Boston, MA 02108-1696 (617) 994-6941 jkeller@bhe.mass.edu Katherine Piraino Director of Human Resources Massachusetts Department of Higher Education One Ashburton Place, Room 1401 Boston, MA MA 02108 (617) 994-6956 KPiraino@bhe.mass.edu Maryland Geoffrey Newman Director of Finance Policy Maryland Higher Education Commission 6 N. Liberty St. Baltimore, MD 21201 (410) 767-3301 gnewman@mhec.state.md.us Maine Miriam White Director of Budget & Financial Analysis University of Maine System 16 Central Street Bangor, ME 04401-5106 (207) 973-3364 mwhite@maine.edu
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Michigan Robert Murphy Higher Education Analyst Michigan State Budget Office Romney Building, Sixth Floor 111 South Capitol Avenue Lansing, MI 48909 (517) 355-1539 MurphyR1@michigan.gov Minnesota Jack Rayburn Research and Program Services Minnesota Office of Higher Education 1450 Energy Park Drive Suite 350 St. Paul, MN 55108-5227 (651) 642-0593 jack.rayburn@state.mn.us Missouri Paul Wagner Deputy Commissioner Missouri Department of Higher Education 205 Jefferson Street PO Box 1469 Jefferson City, MO 65102-1469 (573) 751-2361 paul.wagner@dhe.mo.gov Mississippi Linda McFall Assistant Commissioner of Finance & Administration Mississippi Institutions of Higher Learning 3825 Ridgewood Road, Room 426 Jackson, MS 39211 (601) 432-6147 lmcfall@mississippi.edu
Montana Frieda Houser Director of Accounting & Budgeting Montana University System 2500 Broadway Street P.O. Box 203201 Helena, MT 59620 (406) 444-0320 fhouser@montana.edu North Carolina Ginger Burks Associate Vice President for Finance The University of North Carolina General Administration P. O. Box 2688, 910 Raleigh Road Chapel Hill, NC 27515-2688 (919) 962-4604 ginger@northcarolina.edu Tracy Williams Pender Systems Accountant, Business & Finance Division North Carolina Community College System 200 West Jones Street Raleigh, NC 27603 (919) 807-7230 pendert@nccommunitycolleges.edu North Dakota Cathy McDonald Director of Finance North Dakota University System 600 East Boulevard Avenue, Dept. 215 Bismarck, ND 58505-0230 (701) 328-4111 cathy.mcdonald@ndus.edu
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Nebraska Carna Pfeil Associate Director Nebraska's Coordinating Commission for Postsecondary Education 140 North 8th Street, Suite 300 P.O. Box 95005 Lincoln, NE 68509-5005 (402) 471-2847 Carna.Pfeil@nebraska.gov New Hampshire Melanie DeZenzo Budget Director University System of New Hampshire Dunlap Center 25 Concord Road Durham, NH 03824-3545 (603) 862-0968 melanie.dezenzo@usnh.edu Amy E. Slattery Grants, Research and Studies Coordinator New Hampshire Department of Education Division of Higher Education Higher Education Commission 101 Pleasant Street Concord, NH 03301 (603) 271-2695 Amy.Slattery@doe.nh.gov New Jersey Betsy Garlatti Director, Finance and Research New Jersey Higher Education 20 West State Street, 4th Floor Trenton, NJ 08625-0542 (609) 292-3235 betsy.garlatti@che.state.nj.us
New Mexico David Hadwiger Director of Institutional Finance New Mexico Higher Education Department 2048 Galisteo Street Santa Fe, NM 875052100 (505) 476-8430 david.hadwiger@state.nm.us Nevada Ginny Wiswell Assistant to the Vice Chancellor of Finance & Facilities Planning University & Community College System of Nevada 2601 Enterprise Road Reno, NV 89512-1666 (775) 784-3409 wiswell@nevada.edu Mark Stevens Vice Chancellor of Finance Nevada System of Higher Education 2601 Enterprise Road Reno, NV 89512-1666 (775) 784-4901 Mark_Stevens@nshe.nevada.edu New York Alan Finn Senior Associate Budget Director State University of New York State University Plaza Albany, NY 12246 (518) 320-1248 Alan.Finn@suny.edu Catherine Abata Deputy Budget Director The City University of New York University Budget Office 230 West 41st Street New York, NY 10036 Catherine.Abata@mail.cuny.edu
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Wendy C. Gilman University Budget Director University of the State of New York, State Education Department - Office of Higher Education University Budget Office State University Plaza Albany, NY 12246 (518) 443-5165 wendy.gilman@suny.edu Ohio David Cannon Vice Chancellor of Finance & Data Management Ohio Board of Regents 30 East Broad Street, 36th Floor Columbus, OH 43215 (614) 728-2281 dcannon@regents.state.oh.us Oklahoma Amanda Paliotta Vice Chancellor for Budget & Finance Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education 655 Research Parkway, Suite 200 Suite 200 Oklahoma City, OK 73104 (405) 225-9126 apaliotta@osrhe.edu Oregon Paul Schroeder Researcher Department of Community Colleges and Workforce Development 255 Capitol Street NE Salem, OR 97310 (503) 378-8648 paul.schroeder@state.or.us Barbara Russell Senior Fiscal Analyst, Budget Operations & Planning Oregon University System B236 Kerr Admin Bldg Corvallis, OR 97331 (541) 737-2924 Barb_Russell@ous.edu
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Elizabeth Willis Schauermann Associate Vice Provost, Finance Oregon Health & Science University 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, MC L349 Portland, OR 97239 (503) 494-0530 willise@ohsu.edu Pennsylvania Lori Graham Pennsylvania Department of Higher Education 333 Market Street, 4th Floor Harrisburg, PA 17126-0333 (717) 787-5993 lgraham@state.pa.us Rhode Island Robin Beaupre Higher Education Budget Administrator Rhode Island Board of Governors for Higher Education The Shepard Building 80 Washington Street, 5th Floor Providence, RI 02903 (401) 456-6020 rbeaupre@ribghe.org South Carolina Stephanie Charbonneau Program Manager, Finance South Carolina Commission on Higher Education 1122 Lady Street, Suite 300 Columbia, SC 29201 (803) 737-7781 scharbonneau@che.sc.gov South Dakota Monte Kramer Vice President for Administrative Services South Dakota Board of Regents 306 East Capital Avenue, Suite 200 Pierre, SD 57501-2545 (605) 773-3455 montek@sdbor.edu
Mary Ellen Garrett Budget and Accounting Coordinator South Dakota Board of Regents 306 East Capital Avenue Suite 200 Pierre, SD 57501-2545 (605) 773-3455 maryg@sdbor.edu Tennessee Russ Deaton Associate Executive Director of Fiscal Policy & Administration Tennessee Higher Education Commission 404 James Robertson Parkway, Suite 1900 Nashville, TN 37243-0830 (615) 741-3860 Russ.Deaton@tn.gov Scott Boelscher Director of Fiscal Policy and Facilities Analysis Tennessee Higher Education Commission 404 James Robertson Parkway, Suite 1900 Nashville, TN 37243 (615) 741-7578 scott.boelscher@tn.gov Texas Jim Pinkard Program Director, Finance/ Resource Planning Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board 1200 East Anderson Lane, PO Box 12788 Austin, TX 78711 (512) 427-6137 jim.pinkard@thecb.state.tx.us Utah Gregory Stauffer Associate Commissioner for Finance & Facilities Utah System of Higher Education 60 S 400 W Salt Lake City, UT 84101-1284 (801) 321-7104 gstauffer@utahsbr.edu
Paul Morris Assistant Commissioner for Budget and Planning Utah System of Higher Education 60 S 400 W Salt Lake City, UT 84101-1284 (801) 366-8423 pmorris@utahsbr.edu Virginia R. Dan Hix Finance Policy Director State Council of Higher Education for Virginia 101 North 14th Street James Monroe Building, 10th Floor Richmond, VA 23219 (804) 225-3188 DanHix@schev.edu Yan Zheng Assistant Director for Finance Policy State Council of Higher Education for Virginia 101 North 14th Street James Monroe Building, 10th Floor Richmond, VA 23219 (804) 225-3145 YanZheng@schev.edu Vermont Richard Cate Vice President for Finance and Administration; Lecturer University of Vermont Waterman Bldg. 350B Burlington, VT 05405 (802) 656-0219 richard.cate@uvm.edu Thomas A. Robbins Chief Financial Officer Vermont State Colleges PO Box 359 Waterbury, VT 05676-0359 (802) 241-2531 robbinst@vsc.edu
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Washington Richard Heggie Fiscal Policy Analyst Washington Higher Education Coordinating Board 917 Lakeridge Way SW Olympia, WA 98504 (360) 753-7891 RickH@hecb.wa.gov Wisconsin Sue Ellen Buth Policy and Planning Analyst University of Wisconsin System 1720 Van Hise Hall - 1220 Linden Drive Madison, WI 53706 (608) 262-1751 sbuth@uwsa.edu West Virginia Patty Miller Budget Officer West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission 1018 Kanawha Blvd E, Suite 700 Charleston, WV 25301 (304) 558-0281 miller@hepc.wvnet.edu
Wyoming Suzie Waggoner IPEDS Coordinator University of Wyoming Office of Institutional Analysis 1000 E. University Avenue Old Main 413 Laramie, WY 82071 (307) 766-2895 SCash@uwyo.edu Matthew Petry Deputy Director and Chief Financial Officer Wyoming Community College Commission 2020 Carey Avenue, 8th Floor Cheyenne, WY 82002 (307) 777-5859 mpetry@commission.wcc.edu Douglas Vinzant Vice President for Administration University of Wyoming 1000 E. University Avenue Laramie, WY 82071 (307) 766-5766 dvinzant@uwyo.edu Claire Smith Administrative Services Manager Wyoming Community College System 2020 Carey Avenue, 8th Floor Cheyenne, WY 82002 (307) 777-7227 claire.smith@wyo.gov
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Page 1: American Reinvestment and Recovery Act of 2009 (ARRA) Funds Please report all ARRA funds received in this section. There is a place to report Education Stabilization Funds, Government Services Funds for public higher education operations, and Government Services Funds for capital improvements to higher education institutions, whether they are public or private. Please make sure that these funds are NOT included in your state support figures. In the reports, these funds will be reported separately AND added to state support figures. If you include these funds in the state support figures, they will be double counted Data Elements collected in this section: 1. Education Stabilization Funds used to restore the level of state support for public higher education 2. Government Services Funds used for public higher education excluding modernization, renovation, or repair. 3. Government Service Funds used for modernization, renovation, or repair of higher education institutions (public and private). State Support for All Higher Education The intent of this section is to collect information about how much money the state provides to support higher education (excluding capital and debt service). Include: sums appropriated for state aid to local public community colleges and for operation of statesupported community colleges, and for vocational-technical two-year colleges or institutes that are predominantly for high school graduates and adult students; sums appropriated to statewide coordinating boards or governing boards, either for board expenses or for allocation by the board to other institutions or both; sums appropriated for state scholarships or other student financial aid; sums destined for higher education but designated to some other state agency (as in the case of funds intended for faculty fringe benefits that are appropriated to the state treasurer and disbursed by that office); and appropriations directed to private institutions of higher education at all levels. Exclude: sums for capital outlays and debt service; and sums derived from federal sources, student fees, and auxiliary enterprises. ALL state funding for higher education (even those sums that are appropriated to other state agencies) should be reported in this section. Please DO NOT include any ARRA funds in this section. State Support for All Higher Education is calculated by adding state tax support, non-tax support, nonappropriated support, endowment earnings, portions of multi-year appropriations from previous years, and other state support and SUBTRACTING from that sum appropriations that you expect will have to be returned to the state and appropriations in the current year for use in other years (in other words, and appropriated funds that are not usable in the fiscal year in which they are appropriated). Data elements collected in this section: 1. Appropriations from state government taxes to institutions for operations and other higher education activities.
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2. Funding under state auspices for appropriated non-tax state support set aside by the state for higher education. These may include, but are not limited to, monies from lotteries (including lottery scholarships), tobacco settlement, or casinos, or other gaming. 3. Funding under state auspices for non-appropriated state support. These may include, but are not limited to, monies from receipt of lease income, cattle-grazing rights fees, and oil/mineral extraction fees on land set aside by the state for higher education. 4. Interest or earning received from state funded endowments set aside and pledged to public sector institutions. 5. Portions of multi-year appropriations from previous years. 6. Any other state funds not included above. Please explain in the comments box below. 7. Appropriations you expect will have to be returned to the state 8. Portions of multi-year appropriations in the current year which are to be spread over other years. Page 2: Adjustments to State Support for Higher Education In this section, you are asked to identify sums of state support that do not fund directly or through student assistance the degree credit instruction, research, or services of public higher education. Any funds you report in this section should be included in your State Support for Higher Education figure. The sums reported in this section will be subtracted from State Support for Higher Education to calculate State Support for Public Higher Education. Data elements collected in this section: 1. State funding for students in continuing or adult education courses (non-credit) and non-credit extension courses (non-credit) which are not part of a regular program leading to a degree or certificate. 2. Sums to independent institutions for operating expenses. 3. Allocation of appropriations for student financial aid grants awarded to students attending state independent institutions. Include dollars intended solely for students attending independent institutions and the independent sectors portion of state aid programs. Estimate if needed. 4. Allocation of appropriations for student financial aid grants awarded to students attending out of-state institutions (estimate if needed).
Additional Funding Sources The sums collected in this section are for informational purposes only. None of the sums reported in this section should be included in the sums reported in any of the previous sections. Data elements collected in this section: 1. State appropriated funds derived from federal sources. 2. Tuition charges collected by the institutions and remitted to the state as an offset to the state appropriations. 3. Sums to independent institutions for capital outlay (new construction and debt service/retirement).
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Page 3: Local Appropriations Appropriations should reflect your best estimate, at the time of reporting, of amounts actually provided to institutions and expected to be provided during the fiscal year. Data elements collected in this section: 1. Local Appropriations: From local government taxes to institutions for operating expenses. Research-Agriculture-Medical (RAM) Appropriations to Public Institutions of Higher Education As a component of total state and local appropriations, report collectively the appropriations intended for the direct operations of research, agriculture and health care public services, and medical schools. Exclude the indirect costs. Do not include discretionary use by faculty of unrestricted appropriations supplemented by other revenues for short-term research primarily performed as an adjunct component of instruction (departmental research of an unsponsored nature). When unknown, appropriations for sponsored research should be estimated equal to total research expenditures less state grants and contracts for research and federal and private revenues restricted for research. Assume no tuition revenues are used for research. These funds SHOULD be included in your State Support for All Higher Education figures. Data elements collected in this section: 1. Appropriated sums for research centers, laboratories, and institutes, and appropriated sums separately budgeted by institutions for organized research. Generally, these are ongoing programs. Include all health and science research. 2. Appropriated sums for agricultural experiment stations and cooperative extension services. 3. Appropriated sums for teaching or affiliated hospital operations and public service patient care. Include all medical, dental, veterinary, optometry, pharmacy, mental health, nursing, and other health science institutes, clinics, laboratories, dispensaries, etc. primarily serving the public. 4. Appropriated sums for the direct operation and administrative support of the four major types of medical schools (medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, and osteopathic medicine) and centers corresponding to the medical enrollments. Public Institution Tuition Revenue In this section, you are asked to supply information about tuition revenues. One of the intents of this section is to calculate Net Tuition Revenue. This is used in the SHEF report as a measure of how much revenue institutions have to spend that is paid by students. Net Tuition Revenue is Gross Tuition and Fees less state funded student aid, institutional discounts and waivers, and tuition revenue paid by medical students. Data elements collected in this section: 1. Gross Tuition plus Mandatory Education and General Fees* (public institutions). 2. Tuition and Fees waived or discounted by public institutions. (If you enter 0, please provide additional information in the comments box explaining why it is 0 for your state.) (Will be subtracted.)
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3. State appropriated student aid for Tuition and Mandatory Fees for public institutions. (Will be subtracted.) 4. Tuition and Mandatory Fees paid by public Medical Students. (Will be subtracted.) 5. Public institution tuition and fees used for capital debt service/retirement and capital improvement other than that paid by user students for auxiliary enterprise debt service. Page 4: Annual FTE at Public Institutions To calculate annual FTE, determine the total number of degree credit hours* (including summer sessions) and apply the following conversion factors: 30 semester or 45 quarter undergraduate credit hours/year = 1 annual FTE student 24 semester or 36 quarter graduate credit hours/year = 1 annual FTE student These conversion factors are based on 15 undergraduate and 12 graduate credit hours per semester or quarter. To calculate annual FTE for non-degree credit* vocational-technical, remedial and other program enrollments at two-year community colleges and state approved area vocational-technical institutes in courses which result in some form of certificate or other formal recognition, determine the total yearly number of contact hours and apply the following conversion factor: 900 contact hours/year = 1 annual FTE student This conversion factor is based on a normal load of 25 contact hours per week for 36 weeks. * Credits counted in the FTE calculation, for purposes of SHEF, include credits that are state funded and could potentially lead to a degree. Data elements collected in this section: 1. FTE calculated from course work creditable for a degree (including all health science and medical school enrollment) plus course work in a vocational or technical program normally terminal and results in a certificate or some other formal recognition. 2. Enrollment in schools of medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, and osteopathic medicine (hereafter referred to as medical schools). Page 5: This page is a verification page. These are the figures you will see in the SHEF report. Please review for accuracy. Page 6: On this page, you are asked to break certain data elements down by sector. Please complete this section to the best of your ability.
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